Paloona Dam
| Paloona Dam | |
|---|---|
The power station located below the dam wall | |
Paloona Dam Location of the dam in Tasmania | |
| Country | Australia |
| Location | Northern Tasmania |
| Coordinates | 41°16′59″S 146°14′55″E / 41.28312°S 146.248616°E |
| Purpose | Power |
| Status | Operational |
| Opening date | 1971 |
| Owner | Hydro Tasmania |
| Dam and spillways | |
| Type of dam | Rock-fill dam |
| Impounds | Forth River |
| Height | 43 m (141 ft) |
| Length | 171 m (561 ft) |
| Dam volume | 155×103 m3 (5.5×106 cu ft) |
| Spillways | 1 |
| Spillway type | Uncontrolled side channel |
| Spillway capacity | 2,040 m3/s (72,000 cu ft/s) |
| Reservoir | |
| Creates | Lake Paloona |
| Total capacity | 19,110 ML (15,490 acre⋅ft) |
| Catchment area | 759 km2 (293 sq mi) |
| Surface area | 17.8 ha (44 acres) |
| Normal elevation | 47 m (154 ft) AHD |
| Paloona Power Station | |
| Coordinates | 41°16′59″S 146°14′56″E / 41.28306°S 146.24889°E |
| Operator | Hydro Tasmania |
| Commission date | 1972 |
| Type | Run-of-the-river |
| Hydraulic head | 31 m (102 ft) |
| Turbines | 1 x 30 MW (40,000 hp) Andritz Kaplan-type |
| Installed capacity | 30 MW (40,000 hp) |
| Capacity factor | 0.8 |
| Annual generation | 151 GWh (540 TJ) |
| Website hydro.com.au | |
| [1] | |
The Paloona Dam is a concrete-faced rock-fill embankment dam across the Forth River, located in northern Tasmania, Australia. Completed in 1971, the resultant reservoir, Lake Paloona, was established for the purpose of generation of hydroelectricity via the adjacent Paloona Power Station, a run-of-the-river hydroelectric power station.
The dam, its reservoir, and the power station are owned and operated by Hydro Tasmania.
Dam and reservoir overview
The concrete-face rockfill dam wall is 43 metres (141 ft) high and 171 metres (561 ft) long. When full, Lake Paloona has capacity of 19,100 megalitres (15,500 acre⋅ft) and covers 178 hectares (440 acres), drawn from a catchment area of 759 square kilometres (293 sq mi). The uncontrolled spillway has a flow capacity of 2,040 cubic metres per second (72,000 cu ft/s).[1]
Hydroelectric power station
The Paloona Power Station is part of the Mersey–Forth scheme that comprises seven run-of-the-river hydroelectric power stations and one mini-hydro power station. The final station in the scheme, the Paloona Power Station is located immediately below the dam wall. Water from Lake Paloona is fed to the power station by a short single penstock under the dam.[2]
The power station was commissioned in 1972 by the Hydro Electric Corporation (TAS) with a Fuji Kaplan-type turbine, with a generating capacity of 30 megawatts (40,000 hp).[3] In 2014 the turbine was upgraded to a more efficient Andritz Kaplan-type turbine, which also has a generating capacity of 30 megawatts (40,000 hp).[4] The station output, estimated to be 151 gigawatt-hours (540 TJ) annually,[1] is fed to TasNetworks' transmission grid via an 11 kV/110 kV Siemens generator transformer to the outdoor switchyard.[5]
See also
- List of power stations in Tasmania
- List of reservoirs and dams in Tasmania
- List of run-of-the-river hydroelectric power stations
References
- ^ a b c "Register of Large Dams Australia-2015" (Excel. Requires download. Row 394). ANCOLD. January 2022. Retrieved 5 March 2026.
- ^ "Energy: Mersey-Forth". Hydro Tasmania. n.d. Retrieved 3 July 2015.
- ^ "Paloona Power Station: Mersey-Forth Catchment" (PDF). Hydro Tasmania. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 24 June 2023.
- ^ "Paloona Power Station: Mersey-Forth Catchment" (PDF). Hydro Tasmania. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 June 2023. Retrieved 24 June 2023.
- ^ "Principal power stations in Australia". Energy Business Today. Archived from the original on 3 August 2009. Retrieved 8 January 2010.
External links
- "Dams in Tasmania: Hydroelectric & man-made lakes near Glencoe B&B". Glen Country. n.d. Retrieved 23 April 2026.
- "Lake Paloona Dam (Forth Rv) (H)". Waterways Guide. 2026. Retrieved 23 April 2026.
- "Fishing in Ketish". North West Tasmania. n.d. Retrieved 23 April 2026.